Nicolas-Guy Brenet
{{short description|French painter (1728–1792)}}
File:Vestier - Nicolas Guy Brenet, peintre (1728-1792), 1786.jpg, 1786]]
File:Sleeping Endymion, 1756, by Nicolas-Guy Brenet (1728-1792) - IMG 7257.jpg, 1756. Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts, USA]]
Nicolas-Guy Brenet (1 July 1728 — 21 February 1792) was a French history painter.
Brenet was born and died in Paris. He studied in the atelier of François Boucher, but abandoned his master's rococo manner in the 1760s, to paint in a conscious revival of the academic classicism of Nicolas Poussin.The monograph is Marc Sandoz, Nicolas-Guy Brenet, 1728-1792, Paris : Éditart-Quartre chemins, 1979. His cycle of religious paintings for Montmerle Charterhouse near Dijon lies securely in the mainstream of French religious painting. His enormous Battle of the Greeks and Trojans over the Body of Patroclus is an example of the new direction of official art in France. In his unusual and precocious choice of medieval subjects, as they were commissioned by the official Bâtiments du roi, his work foreshadowed the style troubadour of the 19th century.
He was the father of {{ill|Nicolas-Guy-Antoine Brenet|fr}} (1773–1846), a medallist.
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Category:18th-century French painters
Category:French history painters
Category:18th-century French male artists
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